Copyright
in sentence
137 examples of Copyright in a sentence
Ten years ago, history repeated itself, when risperidone, the first of the new-generation antipsychotic drugs, came off copyright, so anybody could make copies.
And it's a
copyright
violation.
And policing
copyright
violations for children's birthday cakes was such a hassle that the College Bakery said, "You know what, we're getting out of that business.
They want to raise the cost of
copyright
compliance to the point where people simply get out of the business of offering it as a capability to amateurs.
Because until we convince Congress that the way to deal with
copyright
violation is the way
copyright
violation was dealt with with Napster, with YouTube, which is to have a trial with all the presentation of evidence and the hashing out of facts and the assessment of remedies that goes on in democratic societies.
The recent debate over
copyright
laws like SOPA in the United States and the ACTA agreement in Europe has been very emotional.
I'd therefore like to propose that we employ, we enlist, the cutting edge field of
copyright
math whenever we approach this subject.
For instance, just recently the Motion Picture Association revealed that our economy loses 58 billion dollars a year to
copyright
theft.
Now rather than just argue about this number, a
copyright
mathematician will analyze it and he'll soon discover that this money could stretch from this auditorium all the way across Ocean Boulevard to the Westin, and then to Mars ... (Laughter) ... if we use pennies.
But identifying the actual losses to the economy is almost impossible to do unless we use
copyright
math.
And this is just one of the many mind-blowing statistics that
copyright
mathematicians have to deal with every day.
Now this is a key number from the
copyright
mathematicians' toolkit.
Hollywood and Congress derived this number mathematically back when they last sat down to improve
copyright
damages and made this law.
Some people think this number's a little bit large, but
copyright
mathematicians who are media lobby experts are merely surprised that it doesn't get compounded for inflation every year.
Now you might find
copyright
math strange, but that's because it's a field that's best left to experts.
He publishes his music in Italy, France, Germany and England on the same day, because there's no international copyright, so he's got to have everything published on the same day.
Because institutions at the moment confine their data with
copyright
restrictions and that sort of thing.
So in the episode where he goes to Mars in a London bus, I can't show you the clip, due to the outrageous restrictions of Queen Anne-style
copyright
by the BBC, but in the episode where he goes to Mars in a London bus, Doctor Who is clearly shown getting on to the bus with the Oyster card reader using his psychic paper.
Now, American
copyright
and patent laws run counter to this notion that we build on the work of others.
Somebody put up a tool during the
copyright
debate last year in the Senate, saying, "It's strange that Hollywood has more access to Canadian legislators than Canadian citizens do.
For example, Australia, like about one third of the world's countries, has
copyright
exceptions which allow books to be brailled or read for we blind persons.
It's something that a group of countries and the World Blind Union are advocating, a cross-border treaty so that if books are available under a
copyright
exception and the other country has a
copyright
exception, we can transport those books across borders and give life to people, particularly in developing countries, blind people who don't have the books to read.
I'm not talking about nor justifying people taking other people's content in wholesale and distributing it without the permission of the
copyright
owner.
Instead, the architecture of
copyright
law and the architecture of digital technologies, as they interact, have produced the presumption that these activities are illegal.
Because if
copyright
law at its core regulates something called copies, then in the digital world the one fact we can't escape is that every single use of culture produces a copy.
And on the other side, among our kids, there's a growing
copyright
abolitionism, a generation that rejects the very notion of what
copyright
is supposed to do, rejects
copyright
and believes that the law is nothing more than an ass to be ignored and to be fought at every opportunity possible.
Copyright
policy, Internet policy, how are you ever going to address those problems so long as there's this fundamental corruption in the way our government works?"
Copyright
lawyers are having a field day at this point.
She could care less that these two women were signing posters and coloring books as Snow Queen and Princess Ana with one N to avoid
copyright
lawsuits.
It's also known as a
copyright
trap.
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